preparing himself he wasted in pointless moving from one place to another, and conversation from which he learned nothing.

Tobias was in excellent spirits. He passed Rathbone in the corridor and wished him well with a wry smile. He would have preferred a little fight of it. Such an easy victory was of little savor.

The gallery was half empty again. The public had already made up their minds, and the few spectators present were there only to see justice done and taste a certain vengeance. The startling exceptions to this were Lucius and Harry Stourbridge, who sat towards the front, side by side, and even at a distance, very obviously supporting each other in silent companionship of anguish.

The judge called the court to order.

'Have you any further witnesses, Sir Oliver?' he asked.

'Yes, my lord. I would like to call Hester Monk.'

Tobias looked across curiously.

The judge raised his eyebrows, but with no objection.

Rathbone smiled very slightly.

The usher called for Hester.

She took the stand looking tired and pale-faced, but absolutely confident, and she very deliberately turned and looked up towards the dock and nodded to both Cleo and Miriam. Then she waited for Rathbone to begin.

Rathbone cleared his throat. 'Mrs. Monk, were you in court yesterday when Mrs. Anderson testified to the extraordinary story Miriam Gardiner told when she was first found bleeding and hysterical on Hampstead Heath twenty-two years ago?'

'Yes, I was.'

'Did you follow any course of action because of that?'

'Yes, I went to look for the body of the woman Miriam said she saw murdered.'

Tobias made a sound of derision, halfway between a cough and a snort.

The judge leaned forward enquiringly. 'Sir Oliver, is this really relevant at this stage?'

'Yes, my lord, most relevant,' Rathbone answered with satisfaction. At last there was a warmth inside him, a sense that he could offer a battle. Assuredly, he could startle the equanimity from Tobias’s face.

'Then please make that apparent,' the judge directed.

'Yes, my lord. Mrs. Monk, did you find a body?'

The court was silent, but not in anticipation. He barely had the jurors’ attention.

'Yes, Sir Oliver, I did.'

Tobias started forward, jerking upright from the seat where he had been all but sprawled.

There was a wave of sound and movement from the gallery, a hiss of indrawn breath.

The judge leaned across to Hester. 'Do I hear you correctly, madam? You say you found a body?'

'Yes, my lord. Of course, I was not alone. I took Sergeant Michael Robb with me from the beginning. It was actually he who found it.'

'This is very serious indeed.' He frowned at her, his face pinched and earnest. 'Where is the body now and what can you tell me of it?'

'It is in the police morgue in Hampstead, my lord, and my knowledge of it is closely observed, but only as a nurse, not a doctor.'

'You are a nurse?' He was astounded.

'Yes, my lord. I served in the Crimea.'

'Good gracious.' He sat back. 'Sir Oliver, you had better proceed. But before you do so, I will have order in this court. The next man or woman to make an unwarranted noise will be removed! Continue.'

'Thank you, my lord.' Rathbone turned to Hester. 'Where did you find the body, Mrs. Monk, precisely?'

'In a hollow tree on Hampstead Heath,' she replied. 'We started walking from Mrs. Anderson’s house on Green Man Hill, looking for the sort of place where a body might be concealed, assuming that Mrs. Gardiner’s story was true.'

'What led you to look in a hollow tree?'

There was total silence in the court. Not a soul moved.

'A bird’s nest with a lot of human hair woven into it, caught in one of the lower branches of a tree near it,' Hester answered. 'We searched all around until we found the hollow one. Sergeant Robb climbed up and found the hole. Of course, the area will have grown over a great deal in twenty-two years. It could have been easier to see, to get to, then.'

'And the body?' Rathbone pursued. 'What can you tell us of it?'

She looked distressed; the memory was obviously painful. Her hands tightened on the railing, and she took a deep breath before she began.

'There was only skeleton. Her clothes had largely rotted away, only buttons were left of her dress, and the bones of her... undergarments. Her boots were badly damaged, but there was still more than enough to be recognizable. All the buttons to them were whole and attached to what was left of the leather. They were unusual, and rather good.'

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